Quick answer
For most Newfoundland puppies, our editorial team leans toward Purina Pro Plan Large Breed Puppy Chicken and Rice Formula as the best overall pick. It carries an AAFCO statement for growth of large size dogs (those expected to reach 70 pounds or more as adults), leads with real chicken, and is built around the controlled calcium and steadier calorie density that giant breeds generally need. If your puppy has a sensitive stomach, Hill’s Science Diet Large Breed Puppy may suit better. On a tighter budget, Diamond Naturals Large Breed Puppy is a sensible value option, while Royal Canin Giant Puppy targets the giant category specifically and Eukanuba Large Breed Puppy rounds out the grain inclusive field. Always confirm any diet choice with your own veterinarian.
What to consider for Puppy Food For Newfoundland
Newfoundlands are a giant breed that can reach well over 100 pounds, and their skeleton keeps developing for 18 to 24 months. The biggest nutritional concern during this window is controlled, slow growth. Feeding too many calories or too much calcium can push the puppy to grow faster than the joints and bones can safely support, which is associated with a higher risk of developmental orthopedic issues in large and giant breeds. For that reason, a true large breed or giant breed puppy formula matters here, not a generic puppy food.
Look for a formula with a moderate calcium level (large breed growth diets typically target roughly 1.0 to 1.5 percent calcium on a dry matter basis, but you do not need to calculate this yourself if the bag carries the correct AAFCO large size growth statement). Calorie density should be reasonable rather than ultra rich, so you can keep your puppy lean. Newfoundlands are also prone to keeping a thick coat and can be prone to bloat as adults, so portion control and avoiding overfeeding are practical priorities. None of this replaces veterinary guidance, especially if your puppy has any health concern.
What to look for in a dog food
Use a short, concrete checklist when comparing bags. First, find an AAFCO complete and balanced statement for growth, ideally one that explicitly includes large size dogs (70 pounds or more as an adult). This is the single most important label line for a Newfoundland puppy. Second, check that a named meat is the first ingredient, such as chicken, lamb, or salmon, rather than a vague label. Third, aim for sensible nutrient ranges: large breed puppy foods commonly land around 26 to 30 percent protein and roughly 12 to 16 percent fat on a dry matter basis, with moderate calories so the puppy stays lean. These are general ranges, not medical rules, and your veterinarian can fine tune them for your individual dog.
Fourth, confirm the food is formulated for large or giant breed growth specifically, since controlled calcium and phosphorus are the point of these recipes. Finally, joint and omega support is a reasonable plus for a heavy breed: ingredients like fish oil for omega 3 fatty acids (EPA and DHA) support skin, coat, and developing tissue, and some formulas add glucosamine. Supplements and joint additives are not a treatment for any diagnosed condition, so talk to your veterinarian before adding anything beyond a complete and balanced food.
How we chose these picks
- Prioritized foods carrying an AAFCO complete and balanced statement for growth that includes large size dogs.
- Required a named animal protein, such as chicken, lamb, or salmon, as the first listed ingredient.
- Favored controlled calcium and moderate calorie density appropriate for slow giant breed growth.
- Compared protein and fat levels against typical large breed puppy ranges using publicly available product information.
- Checked each brand against the FDA animal food recall list and gave weight to consistent manufacturing track records.
- Considered availability and value so the picks are realistic to buy and feed consistently on Amazon.
- Read owner feedback for recurring real world issues like stool quality and palatability, treating it as context, not proof.
- Never ranked a product higher just because it pays a commission.
What to avoid
- Foods that list only an unnamed “meat meal” as the protein source, with no named species, since you cannot verify quality or suitability.
- Defaulting to grain-free or legume-heavy recipes without a specific reason. The FDA investigation into a potential link between certain diets and canine dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is ongoing, and grain inclusive recipes are the safer default for most puppies unless your veterinarian advises otherwise.
- Feeding an all life stages food to a large or giant breed puppy. These often have higher calcium and calorie density than a controlled large breed growth diet, which is not ideal for a Newfoundland.
- Making abrupt diet switches. Transition over about 7 to 10 days, mixing increasing amounts of the new food into the old, to reduce digestive upset.
For more help choosing, browse our dog guides, our dog food reviews, and our dog nutrition articles.